Joseph C. Miller Memorial Lecture by Crystal Eddins
How did issues of intimacy, like sexuality, pregnancy, coercion, and family, shaped enslaved women’s decisions to resist during slave rebellions in the Caribbean and U.S. South?
This lecture explores how reproductive autonomy, kinship, and sacred knowledge influenced enslaved women’s resistance, often overlooked in historical archives and scholarship. From ending pregnancies to escaping with children or forming maroon communities, women resisted both bondage and the exploitation of their bodies. This work-in-progress highlights how family and intimacy were central, not peripheral, to the politics of rebellion and the fight to undermine the capitalist logic of Atlantic slavery.
This lecture explores how reproductive autonomy, kinship, and sacred knowledge influenced enslaved women’s resistance, often overlooked in historical archives and scholarship. From ending pregnancies to escaping with children or forming maroon communities, women resisted both bondage and the exploitation of their bodies. This work-in-progress highlights how family and intimacy were central, not peripheral, to the politics of rebellion and the fight to undermine the capitalist logic of Atlantic slavery.
Time
Monday, 30.06.25 - 04:15 PM
- 05:45 PM
Event format
Talk
Topic
Black Women and Reproductive Resistance in the Atlantic World
Target groups
Researchers
Students
All interested
Languages
English
Location
Hybrid event (Niebuhrstr. 5 or online via Zoom)
Reservation
required
Additional Information
Organizer
BCDSS
Contact